| Copyright The Washington Post Company Feb 16, 2003
Last year I was a member of the admissions board at the U.S. Naval
Academy, where I have been a civilian professor of English for the past
16 years. The experience brought one thing home to me with great
clarity: Affirmative action, racial and otherwise, is a minefield of
practical paradoxes. Like many institutions of
higher education, the Naval Academy uses race as a criterion in its
admissions process. The practice leads to obvious absurdities, even
inequities. For this reason, the Bush administration's decision to
oppose racial affirmative action in college admissions seems like a
good thing. At the same time, it's difficult not
to sympathize with the goal of representativeness implicit in all
affirmative-action policies. In the academy's case, it does seem
important to have black and Hispanic officer-candidates when so many of
the men and women in the fleet are black or Hispanic. It's not that an
individual black Marine, say, needs a black officer to inspire him to
follow orders, only that he needs to know there are such officers,
somewhere, maybe even right here. In the military, a lot depends on
"morale," that hard-to-quantify measure of satisfaction. It wouldn't
help to say, "Of course Miss America can be black" if she never had
been. At some point you have to put your money where your mouth is.
Here, as elsewhere, the professionals, not the politicians, may have
the better sense of things. Still, the absurdities produced by the present system make me doubt whether we're going about this the right way.
Members of three racial groups receive preference: African Americans,
Hispanics and Native Americans. (Collectively, they make up about 20
percent of the 1,200 students admitted to the class of 2006, according
to the academy's Web site.) But in 2003, it is increasingly unclear
what we even mean when we say "African American." In a recent
discussion of the Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe's novel "Things Fall
Apart," some of my students (all white) amused me by referring to the
characters as African American. I corrected them, then realized that
for them this was the only polite way to refer to black people. We on
the admissions board learned as the months went on that "African
American" can be quite literal. A student whose parents had emigrated
from Ghana, we found, was considered a member of a "protected"
minority, the same as a student whose family came here generations ago
in chains. Does that mean the policy is meant to benefit not just the
disadvantaged descendants of slaves but also newly arrived immigrants?
Apparently not all of them. An applicant whose parents had emigrated
from India was ineligible for preference. The question remains: Whom
exactly is the policy meant to benefit?
Hispanics, of course, can be any skin color. Many Cuban and Dominican
immigrants are, by most people's standards as well as their own, white.
I have had students with Spanish parents, white by my visual
"once-over," who entered Annapolis as "Hispanics." Was this the intent
of the directive? If not, what was? The board also debated whether
students of Brazilian origin "counted" as Hispanics. They speak
Portuguese and are therefore Lusophone, not Hispanic. Yet what's the
difference between a Brazilian and someone from a neighboring
Spanish-speaking country? When we say "Hispanic," do we really mean
"brown-colored and poorly educated"? As for
"Native Americans," they are almost by definition members of other
racial groups as well, usually overwhelmingly so. Most Hawaiians, for
example, are a comfortable mix of many immigrant groups to the islands.
Yet we give greater weight to an applicant's, say, one-eighth protected
ancestry than to his or her seven-eighths unprotected ancestry. The
same is true for all mixed-race students, a growing minority.
For USNA purposes, as for those of the U.S. Census, membership in any
of these categories is based on self-identification. A student may
check as many boxes as he or she wishes. As long as the student checks
one of the three boxes for protected minorities, he or she is assigned
to an officer on the admissions staff who then actively shepherds that
application through the rest of the process. In the fall, we were told
that if a student checked the Native American box, we could ask for
confirmation of tribal affiliation. Yet by mid- year we were being told
that we could not. Early in the year, one applicant told an admissions
officer she was one-eighth Hispanic. But one-eighth was enough, and in
any case we later learned we couldn't even ask about the percentage.
This led to apparent howlers like the student with an un- Hispanic last
name attending the flossiest private school in his part of Texas, who
identified himself as Hispanic and received preferential treatment.
There have also been cases of "minority" students being identified as
"white" by their schools. (We debated whether we could nail these
applicants for lying, but finally decided that a school's visual
impression could not be taken as fact, either.)
In a year on the USNA Admissions Board, I never got a sense of the
underlying philosophical justification for this clearly illogical
policy. Initially we were offered the plausible reason that the Navy
wanted more officers who "looked like" the sailors and Marines. Yet
later, perhaps as someone realized how controversial this line of
thinking was, it was withdrawn, and we were given no reason for
favoring these particular groups. Was it to make up for past economic
inequities? Then we should eliminate special consideration for the rich
ones. To make up for the horror of slavery? Then we should eliminate it
for the recent immigrants, as well as for anyone who couldn't prove
having had an enslaved ancestor. If, on the
other hand, what we were really talking about was skin color, I
suggested with would-be Swiftian irony that we send out paint cards
with varying skin tones and ask applicants to circle the one closest to
their own: Browner than a certain level would lead to preference,
lighter would preclude it. We wouldn't have to dance around all these
other categories that weren't really the point. The reaction, of
course, was shock. We can't do that! Of course, we can't. But this is
why our current situation is so untenable: If we're aiming for
colorblindness, we can't get there via color- definition.
Before students reach our board, the computer generates a number
(called the "whole-person multiple") based on complex algorithms that
take into account their grades, their rank in class, their test scores
and their athletic and extra-curricular activities. Being a child of an
alumnus adds a bit to this score, but only as much as, say, an
especially good essay: 500 points, where a total of 68,000 is
considered a good solid admitting score and 75,000 is stellar. Rank in
class is very important, which tends to benefit high- achieving
students at mediocre or rural schools, but some attempt is made to
equalize this by giving students credit for attending a school that
sends a high proportion of its graduates to college.
For me, the most startling discovery was how immense an advantage is
gained by checking a protected-minority box. First, in practice (there
are few hard and fast rules), we let in members of these minorities
with a much lower whole-person multiple than we usually require,
sometimes as much as 15 percent lower. If a "majority" student scored
600 or more on each part of the SAT I test, math and verbal, we put a
check mark and went on to consider other aspects of the application. We
did so in the case of a "minority" student if the scores were in the
neighborhood of 550. For a minority student with scores in the low 500
range but also compensatory achievements, we usually recommended a year
at the Naval Academy Preparatory School. (Admission to USNA is
guaranteed for a student with a GPA of 2.0 after a year at NAPS.)
Last year, a half-Hispanic applicant challenged the Naval Academy on
the grounds that his low test scores had been cited as a reason for his
rejection. The irony is that in practice we already accept lower scores
from Hispanics than from white or Asian students. His were even lower
than our lowered threshold. In any case, many factors can be used to
"mitigate" either high or low scores. They are not, as this applicant
imagined, absolute criteria. Race, to a degree, is, and his having
checked the box "Hispanic" already gave him a huge advantage.
For the most spectacular effect of self-identifying as one of the three
protected minorities is that the student is admitted to the academy
directly, along with a certain number of athletes and young sailors and
Marines (assuming he or she has been voted in by the board and passed
the rigorous physical exams). That means admitted at the head of the
line, without having to further compete for a sometimes hard-to-get
nomination from a member of Congress or the executive branch that
otherwise is the sine qua non of admission to any of the nation's
military academies. Counting all the favored groups, about 50 percent
of students offered admission to the Naval Academy have bypassed this
nominating process, which leaves so many highly qualified non-favored
students going to State U instead. After a year
on the USNA Admissions Board, I find I am in favor of eliminating all
our set-asides: racial, athletic and fleet- determined. After all,
admitting someone "direct" means that another candidate, probably with
a higher whole-person multiple, does not get in, since most of those
who must compete for nominations are "better" on paper than the direct
admissions. This in turn means that, to whatever degree, the capability
of the officers down the line -- those who will have their fingers on
the buttons -- is at least arguably watered down. The Navy shouldn't
want this; the United States shouldn't want it.
But that's not the only reason for my concern. While all aspects of
affirmative action warrant reassessment, for now the focus is on racial
preferences. And I am convinced that, at bottom, the administration is
right: Race has become far too blunt an instrument for ensuring
"diversity," even if it is used as one of several criteria (Condoleezza
Rice's solution). In an immigration-altered society no longer polarized
into "black" and "white," the racial categories on which
affirmative-action policies depend have begun to break down.
It is philosophically justifiable to say -- as the Bush administration
should be saying, but isn't -- that we want the American dream to be
open to all. In the Navy's case, that means the Naval Academy, the
officer corps and other leadership roles. But "solving" the problem by
deciding what we want our naval leadership to look like and then
letting into the academy people who will help produce that profile, is,
as the current situation shows, worse than no solution at all, since it
is inconsistent with the goal of ultimate colorblindness.
Some argue that if we stop doing this, the academy will once again look
much the way it did during the lily-white years before integration,
with a few atypical exceptions. Yet there is something worse than
having the enrollment of black students at elite institutions drop in
the short run. That is, sitting idly by while society remains
stratified to the point where the only way to get large numbers of
black and other minority students into elite institutions is by cooking
the books. We need applicants who can get in on their own merits. If
this means more intervention, earlier, in disadvantaged communities, so
be it. In the long run, it is the only tenable solution. Bruce Fleming
has just finished a memoir of his first decade teaching at the U.S.
Naval Academy, from which he is currently on sabbatical. This article
represents his personal views. |